Not currently on display at the V&A

Model B64

Armchair
1928 (designed), 1933-36 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is the armchair version of the "B32" chair designed by Marcel Breuer in 1928 though not manufactured until about 1933. In 1927, the designers Mart Stam and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe had introduced cantilevered designs to the public. Breuer developed the cantilevered idea by designing chairs made from a single continuous tubular-steel frame. With the B32 and the B64 chairs he started incorporating a bentwood and cane seat and back into the design. Instead of running the steel frame behind the back, it supports the bentwood elements. In this chair, the B64, the steel is extended outwards to support ebonised bentwood armrests. The cane and bentwood elements were made by the firm Thonet, who was a well-known manufacturer of bentwood furniture from the nineteenth century onward.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleModel B64 (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
ebonised bentwood and chromium-plated metal
Brief description
British 1933 des. Marcel Breuer man. PEL & Thonet
Physical description
Armchair made from chromium-plated metal tubes. The back and seat are caned on ebonised bentwood frames which are held by the tubular structure. The armrests are made in ebonised bentwood.
Dimensions
  • Height: 80cm
  • Width: 59.3cm
  • Depth: 59cm
Measurements from original record of acquisition
Object history
This chair was introduced into the PEL range between 1933 and 1936. The components were made up by Thonet, and shipped to PEL where they were assembled.

Breuer was not allowed to claim these chairs as his own design. When Anton Lorenz sold the Standard-Möbel company to Breuer in 1929, he retained the rights to Stam's cantilevered chair designs, and brought a series of lawsuits against Thonet, claiming that by manufacturing any cantilever chair, his patent rights were infringed. The court eventually ruled in 1932 that Lorenz owned the licence to produce Stam's patented cantilever and had the sole right to manufacture all rectilinear chairs with only two legs, including Breuer's designs. As a result, a dispirited Breuer gave up designing in tubular steel and Stam's name replaced Breuer's in the Thonet catalogues. Despite this, contemporary and post-war publications identified these chairs as Breuer designs. Between 1962 and 1963, production of the chairs resumed under Breuer's name. Since then the Breuer chairs have become some of the most ubiquitous of all modernist chairs.

The B&W negative no for this chair is HC2940
Summary
This is the armchair version of the "B32" chair designed by Marcel Breuer in 1928 though not manufactured until about 1933. In 1927, the designers Mart Stam and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe had introduced cantilevered designs to the public. Breuer developed the cantilevered idea by designing chairs made from a single continuous tubular-steel frame. With the B32 and the B64 chairs he started incorporating a bentwood and cane seat and back into the design. Instead of running the steel frame behind the back, it supports the bentwood elements. In this chair, the B64, the steel is extended outwards to support ebonised bentwood armrests. The cane and bentwood elements were made by the firm Thonet, who was a well-known manufacturer of bentwood furniture from the nineteenth century onward.
Collection
Accession number
W.36-1983

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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